Knoxfoss4g20170519
Knoxville FOSS4G Meeting - May 19th 2017
Date
May 19th 2017
Description
This is Tennessee's first FOSS4G meeting.
It's an opportunity for Free and Open Source Software for GIS users in the area to get together and discuss projects (like Forestry projects, or small Gov't projects), software (QGIS, PostGIS, etc), and get to know one another. The event is free. We are looking for sponsors (we'll make you famous). If you want to present a paper please email Randal Hale (rjhale@northrivergeographic.com) and the group will get back with you ASAP. There are a limited number of tickets. So please reserve one so we'll know about refreshments.
Location
Plant Biotech Building
UT Ag Campus
2505 EJ Chapman Dr
Knoxville, TN 37996
Tickets
There are a limited number of tickets:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foss4g-in-tennessee-tickets-32330056068
Parking
Parking will be free for those we have parking passes for. How do you get a parking pass? Register on eventbrite. If anyone car pools then we have extra parking passes. If you get a parking ticket from UTK's Finest Parking Enforcement - YOU ARE ON YOUR OWN.
Speakers
If you want to speak email rjhale@northrivergeographic.com and the committee will get back with you.
List of topics and speakers in nor particular order.
- Introduction to the FOSS4g Community
- Terrain Data Sources Online & LiDAR Processing with SAGA - Prof. Paulo Raposo, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Dept of Geography - Terrain data for almost all of the Earth is freely available online in different formats and resolutions. This presentation will review some sources and portals to these data, many of which are related to NASA and the USGS. The talk will also briefly describe how to generate DEMs from publicly-available LiDAR LAS files using the open source GIS SAGA.
- Introduction to OSGEO Live - Jonathan Riggsbee - s a self-contained bootable DVD, USB thumb drive or Virtual Machine based on Lubuntu, that allows you to try a wide variety of open source geospatial software without installing anything. It is composed entirely of free software, allowing it to be freely distributed, duplicated and passed around. It provides pre-configured applications for a range of geospatial use cases, including storage, publishing, viewing, analysis and manipulation of data. It also contains sample datasets and documentation.
- What's New in QGIS 3.0 - Randal Hale - QGIS has undergone a massive rewrite. What I want to do is gover over QGIS 2.x and talk about migration to 3. I'll also be running QGIS 3.0 to show you what it looks like and some planned new features.
- Landscape Level LiDAR Analysis for Vegetation Structure - Doug Newcombe - The State of North Carolina is in the process of collecting LiDAR data statewide at USGS QL2 ( 2 pts/meter) resolution or better. The point clouds generated from this effort can be more than 10 billion points per county. GRASS GIS can be used to quickly analyze massive LiDAR point clouds for canopy heights and other vegetative structure metrics that can be used to try to characterize habitat of different terrestrial species at a landscape scale.
- LIDAR AND 3D Building Extraction - Carl Anderson
- MS4 Mapping with QGIS and Fulcrum - Hayden Hooper - Georgia EPD’s Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) permit requires local governments in regulated areas to establish a stormwater management program (SWMP), which includes mapping and inspections of stormwater infrastructure. In 2016, Chatsworth Water Works used QGIS and Fulcrum to map approximately 40% of the regulated area. This experience will be shared to display the pros and cons of our first venture into open source mapping.
- The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly of QGIS in Local Gov't - Adam Trent - The City of Athens TN, Tennessee GIS Department has utilized QGIS for the last year for many projects within the city and to answer requests for outside agencies. For this presentation we will present some good, bad and ugly things we have encountered within the last year of using the software.
- Extracting Landcover and Single Class Features from North Carolina NAIP Imagery - Frank Obusek - NAIP imagery is a readily available data set for most government GIS agencies and private sector organizations. Using 4-band image data, many types of landcover and features can be extracted without the burden of additional costs for each new project imagery. The leaf-on collection of the imagery lends itself to many forestry and vegetation-related classification projects. It can also be used to extract water-related features and quickly identify and geolocate water bodies of interest.
- OpenStreetMap in Bradley County TN - Leah Keith Houle - Work on the Open Source mapping in Bradley County has been an ongoing project with the assistance of TeachOSM. Work and maps have been created for the Churches and Cemeteries of Bradley County. Mapping is continuing in this area for the Eastern Tribe of the Cherokee Nation and the Hiwassee Historical Museum for 16 sites of Fort Cass in the Northern portions of Bradley and McMinn Counties. To map the locations of the Fort holding cells and Blythe Ferry where 18,000 Cherokees that were removed from their ancestral land in the 1838 in the Trail of Tears from Bradley County. This is a work in progress with partners from the Eastern tribe of the Cherokee Nation, Cleveland Chamber of Commerce, the 5 point Museum and Hiwassee Historical Museum and Google Maps trails and Red Bank to create an interactive map with eventually and 360* video to show sites of removal.
- PostGIS - Geoprocessing - Matt Brown - PostGIS can do lot more than just store and retrieve geographic data. In this demo I will walk through some basic geoprocessing tasks in PostGIS including buffer, union, reproject, and more.
Sponsors
- North River Geographic Systems, Inc.
- University of Tennessee Department of Geography
- UT County Technical Assistance Service
Julian Burke, Jr - Chatsworth Water Works Commission